From Washington, DC
- On December 23, 2024, President Biden signed a raft load of Congressionally approved bills into law.
- The 119th Congress convenes on Friday January 3, 2025. Here are links to the 2025 House of Representatives calendar and the 2025 Senate calendar.
- Per Govexec,
- Jimmy Carter, the 39th president of the United States and arguably the most dedicated to reforming the operations of the government, died on Dec. 29 at his home in Plains, Georgia. He was 100.
From the public health and medical research front,
- Pew Research tells us,
- “The number of Americans ages 100 and older is projected to more than quadruple over the next three decades, from an estimated 101,000 in 2024 to about 422,000 in 2054, according to projections from the U.S. Census Bureau. Centenarians currently make up just 0.03% of the overall U.S. population, and they are expected to reach 0.1% in 2054.
- The number of centenarians in the United States has steadily ticked up since 1950, when the Census Bureau estimates there were just 2,300 Americans ages 100 and older. (The Census Bureau uses calculated estimates for years prior to the 1990 census because it has identified large errors in the census counts of centenarians for those years.)
- “In the last three decades alone, the U.S. centenarian population has nearly tripled. The 1990 census counted around 37,000 centenarians in the country.”
- The Wall Street Journal reports,
- “The rich get richer—and older. People with high salaries and net worth tend to live longer lives, research shows.
- “Once Americans make it to their late 50s, the wealthiest 10% live to a median age of around 86 years, roughly 14 years longer than the least wealthy 10%, according to a study published earlier this year in JAMA Internal Medicine.
- “People with more money can afford healthier food, more healthcare and homes in safer, less-polluted neighborhoods, says Kathryn Himmelstein, a co-author of the study and a medical director at the Boston Public Health Commission.
- “Though you can’t add more months or years to your online shopping cart yet, health and aging researchers say there are ways to spend money to improve your chances of living longer. They suggest favoring purchases that help you track your health, stay active and reduce stress.”
- Medscape points out,
- A booster dose of recombinant pertussis vaccines provides sustained immunity in adolescents and young adults even after 5 years, with pertussis toxin (PT)–neutralizing antibody levels remaining 2.5- to 3-fold higher than pre-vaccination levels.
- Per MedPage Today,
- A study presented at the American Society of Hematology (ASH) annual meeting revealed that multiple myeloma patients with higher socioeconomic deprivation, as measured by the Area Deprivation Index (ADI), experienced poorer outcomes, emphasizing the need for targeted interventions.
From the U.S. healthcare business front,
- The Wall Street Journal lets us know,
- “Since the assassination of his top lieutenant Brian Thompson on Dec. 4, Andrew Witty has been keeping long difficult hours at the Minnesota headquarters of the giant company he runs, UnitedHealth Group.
- “Witty has been telling company executives during meetings and rank-and-file employees in videos that the work they do is important, lifesaving and deeply appreciated following the killing of Thompson, who had run the company’s health-insurance division.
- ‘More quietly, Witty is telling executives that the company is expecting to hit financial records by the end of the year.
- “It is up to Witty, a knighted former pharmaceutical chief who went on to a rare second act running the even larger and more powerful healthcare conglomerate that is UnitedHealth, to steer through one of the worst corporate crises imaginable: the targeted killing of one of its own executives.
- “Witty must ease the concerns of his company’s anxious 440,000 employees following Thompson’s assassination, and keep its complex business humming, while also responding to a wave of outrage over health-insurance practices since the killing in Midtown Manhattan.”
- Per Beckers Payer Issues,
- “UnitedHealth Group and home health company Amedisys have agreed to extend the deadline for a planned $3.3 billion merger due to a legal challenge by the Department of Justice.
- “In a Dec. 26 regulatory filing, the two companies waived their right to terminate the agreement if it does not occur before an agreed-upon date: either 10 business days after a final court ruling that blocks the merger or December 31, 2025. They also made adjustments to the terms, including a potential penalty fee of up to $325 million if regulatory conditions aren’t met.
- “UnitedHealth’s Optum first announced its plans to merge with Amedisys in June 2023. The Baton Rouge, La.-based company was founded in 1982 and provides home health, hospice and high-acuity care services across more than 500 care centers in 37 states and the District of Columbia.
- “In November, the Justice Department sued to block the deal in a Maryland federal court, citing concerns of lessened competition in the home health market because the two companies are “direct competitors.” The lawsuit claims the purchase could increase home healthcare prices across 23 states and in Washington, DC. The Attorneys General of Maryland, Illinois, New Jersey, and New York have also joined the complaint.
- “The proposed merger has been under an antitrust review by the DOJ since August 2023. In March 2024, Oregon regulators opened their own review after a preliminary report found the deal could hurt competition in the state’s home health markets.”